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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

From the title of Colin Linden's new CD, you might think he was trying his hand at country music. However, the title track is a classic blues by Sleepy John Estes. With Larry Taylor on bass and Stephen Hodges on drums, Linden adopts a largely acoustic traditional approach such as on 1930's bluesman Bo Carter's (Mississippi Sheiks) tune "Go Back Old Devil." On Blind Willie McTell's "Broke Down Engine" Linden looses a slow mournful howl with Hodges heavy on the brushes. By track 4, Linden pens an original tune, "Nowhere to Go," that's given very similar treatment with fast picking blues guitar. One of my favorite tracks on the set is "A True Friend Won't Let You Drown" that Linden writes with Gary Nicholson. Its slower tempo fits with the emotionally powerful lyric, "When I see my brother suffer, lost in the mighty storm; And I know the light is fading and the dark is raging on, I want to reach out and save him from the water pouring down." Linden mines T-Bone Burnett's CD "The True False Identity" and casts "There Would Be Hell to Pay" into a blues ballad about love & violence. Linden covers 1920s/30s slide guitar blues master Tampa Red's "You Can't Get That Stuff No More" that is an upbeat blues shuffle. Linden's own instrumental "Paramount" is a sweet acoustic guitar blues with plenty bounce per ounce. Linden makes a Charley Jordan tune, "Keep It Clean," with a fast acoustic blues guitar style, sound very similar to some of Chris Smither's early blues covers filled with contagious joy. Son House's "Dry Spell Blues" offers more slide guitar pyrotechnics. Blind Willie Johnson's "Trouble Will Soon Be Over" is a stately blues spiritual.Read more ›

If you've had the good fortune to hear Blackie and the Rodeo Kings, and you appreciate that tremendous Canadian roots music band as much as I do, Colin Linden might be the reason why. With the Rodeo Kings he produces, sings, and most importantly plays the guitar. More precisely, he seems to be able to play any kind of guitar that he picks up brilliantly. Make no mistake...Tom Wilson and Stephen Fearing of Blackie and the Rodeo Kings are outstanding musicians in their own right, but Colin Linden is the guy who makes them tick. So if you're a fan of the Rodeo Kings, you'll love this solo effort by Linden. 'Easin' back To Tennessee' is his showcase, and he doesn't disappoint.